Ever since Darius’ inscription at Behistun was deciphered, scholars have puzzled why it is placed high on a cliff where nobody can read it and even the sculptures are difficult to see. Even the ledge on which the builders stood was chiselled away, so that visitors who wished to copy the inscription had to be lowered by ropes from above. A common answer is that he wrote it for the gods, but this does not really work. Darius specifically addresses future kings, and readers who might doubt his words, and includes the boilerplate blessing on those who preserve and proclaim his words and curse on those who alter or destroy them. He also says that after the inscription was composed copies were sent amongst the nations (paragraph 70 of the Old Persian version), and we have a copy in Aramaic from Elephantine on the Nile and a retelling by Herodotus which clearly draws on the official version of the story. Babylonian scholars often had copies of foundation inscriptions and other texts which were buried for posterity in their collections. While the copy at Behistun was placed where nobody could read it, the text which is preserved there clearly has specific mortal audiences which Darius was concerned about, and it influenced many people in the empire and beyond.

At another place in Fars there is a tongue of rock overlooking a river with a fertile plain. On this tongue there is also a large relief carved into the rock about a hundred meters above the plain below. It was there long before Darius, although it is not clear that he was familiar with it like he was with some other rock reliefs.

The Elamite rock relief and valley below at Kurangun in Iran. Photo by Sean Manning, May 2016.

The relief at Kurangun consists of a relief with a ledge in front of it approached from above by a staircase decorated with reliefs of men in tunics approaching. Presumably, it was the site of regular ceremonies or offerings, as are described in the clay tablets from Persepolis in a later period. Art historians suggest that it celebrates the king as the bringer of water and agent of the gods.

The cliff with the relief at Kurangun. Photo by Sean Manning, May 2016.

On the side of the ridge opposite the relief, the slope up from the valley is steep but walkable. Photo by Sean Manning, May 2016.

The central relief features a king in a horned helmet on a serpent throne. This carving helps scholars interpret the coiled pattern on the Elamite relief at Naqš-e Rostam.

Detail of the center panel of the rock relief at Kurangun, showing a king seated on a serpent throne with a fountain of water and attendants. Photo by Sean Manning, May 2016.

As the staircase and wide ledge show, the relief was meant to be visited. Today it can be reached along the broken stairs or by climbing slightly below them then back up. Anyone who is less adventurous or having trouble under the beating sun can stand on a ‘saddle’ of the ridge and examine it from a few dozen meters away.

The staircase approaching the ledge in front of the rock relief at Kurangun. Photo by Sean Manning, May 2016.

A member of the party climbs onto the ledge at Kurangun. There is room for half a dozen people who don’t mind crowds or heights. Photo by Sean Manning, May 2016.

Throughout the long period in which kings carved rock reliefs in Iran, from around 2000 BCE to the Islamic conquest, they took care to place them where visitors could approach them and examine them. Most reliefs are even more accessible than Kurangun, being close to ground level along an important transport route. Behistun seems to be the only one which is placed where nobody can approach it. As I said above, I don’t think that Darius was just writing for the gods. But I do think that he was very concerned with both linking himself with the kings of old, and ensuring that his story would be preserved for posterity whether or not the kings after him believed it. Nobody could visit Darius’ relief to pay their respects, but they could not change it either.

Further Reading: Livius.org s.v. Kurangun. For a letter from Cambyses to the college of priests of the Eanna at Uruk ordering them to show all the old stelai and monuments which they had or knew of to one of his agents, see Kristin Kleber, Tempel und Palast (Ugarit-Verlag, Münster, 2008) No. 33; there is a fragment of an ancient transcription of the ‘Cyrus Cylinder’ in John Curtis ed., The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia, p. 45.

Edit 2016/07/08: Fixed one typo and added a clause to the first paragraph.

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2 thoughts on “The Elamite Rock Relief at Kurangun”

You leave such an inscription in an inaccessible place to protect it from future damage, I conjecture. You foresee that centuries thence an intrepid Briton, or German or whatever, will drop down on a rope and transcribe it all.

Such a defence works against spray-painters, I dare say. Presumably it wouldn’t work against any modern vandal as serious minded as, for example, those ISIS chaps.

Thanks for the comment! I do find it interesting that in a couple of thousand years of kings putting up rock reliefs in Iran, Darius seems to have been the only one who was so concerned with preventing nasty people from coming along and chiselling out his face or drawing rude things on his skirt. In Babylonia they liked to put texts in the foundations of buildings, so that when a dutiful king was renovating them in a century or ten he would find them and the scholars at his court would make copies, but these rock reliefs in Iran seem to have been ‘public.’

I have photos from some of the other ones which I hope to post in a month or two.